The Components of the System Unit Chapter 4 By: Janice Colon.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The System Unit What is the system unit?
Advertisements

Office Management Tools Saima Gul. The System Unit What is the system unit? p Fig. 4-1 Next  Case that contains electronic components of the computer.
Chapter 4 The Components of the System Unit
Discovering Computers Fundamentals, 2012 Edition Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World.
Professor Michael J. Losacco CIS 1110 – Using Computers System Unit Chapter 4.
Chapter 4 The Components of the System Unit
Objectives Overview Discovering Computers 2014: Chapter 6 See Page 248
Chapter 4 The Components of the System Unit. Chapter 4 Objectives Differentiate among various styles of system units Describe the components of a processor.
Living in a Digital World Discovering Computers 2011.
Computers Are Your Future Eleventh Edition Chapter 2: Inside the System Unit Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall1.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 The System Unit.
Discovering Computers Fundamentals, 2012 Edition Chapter Four: The Components of the System Unit.
The System Unit The system unit is a case that contains electronic components of the computer used to process data Discovering Computers 2012: Chapter.
Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World Discovering Computers 2012.
COMPONENTS OF THE SYSTEM UNIT
Discovering Computers 2008 Chapter 4 The Components of the System Unit.
Living in a Digital World Discovering Computers 2010.
Chapter 6 Inside Computers and Mobile Devices Discovering Computers Technology in a World of Computers, Mobile Devices, and the Internet.
Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World Discovering Computers 2012.
Chapter 4 The Components of the System Unit
Lesson 3 — How a Computer Processes Data
© Paradigm Publishing Inc. 2-1 Chapter 2 Input and Processing.
The Components of the System Unit Jeremy Lukianovich.
Chapter 4 The System Unit: Processing and Memory Prepared by : Mrs. Sara salih.
66 CHAPTER THE SYSTEM UNIT. 2 System Units in Microcomputers System Units (system cabinet):container that contain the electronic components of computer.
Chapter 4 The Components of The System Unit Matt Vanacore, Ryan Bratton, Thomas Bender.
Lisa Schulke The Components of the System Unit Chapter 4.
Discovering Computers 2012: Chapter 4
Objectives Overview Describe the various computer and mobile device cases and the contents they protect Describe multi-core processors, the components.
Chapter 4 The Components of the System Unit. Today The System Unit Motherboard CPU Control Unit ALU Machine Cycle System Clock Data Representation Memory.
Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World Discovering Computers 2012 Lecture -1.
Tomorrow’s Technology and You 8/e Chapter 2 Hardware Basics: Inside the Box.
Discovering Computers Fundamentals, 2010 Edition Living in a Digital World Chapter Three.
Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World Discovering Computers 2012 Chapter 4 System Unit Components.
Computers Are Your Future Eleventh Edition Chapter 2: Inside the System Unit Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall1.
© Paradigm Publishing Inc. 2-1 Chapter 2 Input and Processing.
The Central Processing Unit: What Goes on Inside the Computer
The Components of a System Unit
Chapter 4 The Components of the System Unit. The System Unit It is a case that contains electronic components of the computer used to process data Sometimes.
Discovering Computers Fundamentals, Third Edition CGS 1000 Introduction to Computers and Technology Spring 2007.
Lesson 3 — How a Computer Processes Data Unit 1 — Computer Basics.
Chapter 4 The Components of the System Unit. The System Unit Case that contains electronic components of the computer used to process data.
Input/output ports and connectors
PARTS OF THE COMPUTER PREPARED BY: RENATO R. DE VERA II.
CSCI-100 Introduction to Computing Hardware Part I.
1 Course Title: IT IN BUSINESS Course Instructor: ADEEL ANJUM Chapter No: 04 1 BY ADEEL ANJUM (MCS, CCNA,WEB DEVELOPER)
Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World Discovering Computers System Unit Components Chapter Four.
The Components of the System Unit
Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World Discovering Computers 2012 Chapter 2 The Components of the System Unit.
Computer Hardware – System Unit
The Computer System.
Chapter 2.
The System Unit What is the system unit? p Fig. 4-1 Next  Case that contains electronic components of the computer used to process data  Sometimes.
Computers Are Your Future Tenth Edition Inside the System Unit 1.
Information Technology INT1001 Lecture 2 1. Computers Are Your Future Tenth Edition Chapter 6: Inside the System Unit Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education,
IC 3 BASICS, Internet and Computing Core Certification Computing Fundamentals Lesson 2 How Does a Computer Process Data?
Discovering Computers Fundamentals, 2011 Edition Living in a Digital World.
The Components of the System Unit
Objectives Overview Differentiate among various styles of system units on desktop computers, notebook computers, and mobile devices Identify chips, adapter.
Computer Hardware – System Unit
Discovering Computers 2011: Living in a Digital World Chapter 4
Chapter 2: Inside the System Unit
Objectives Overview Differentiate among various styles of system units on desktop computers, notebook computers, and mobile devices Describe the control.
Week 3 The Components of the System Unit
Lecture 3 The Hardware.
Edited by : Noor Alhareqi
Edited by : Noor Alhareqi
Introduction To Computing BBA & MBA
Chapter 4: Hardware for Educators
Presentation transcript:

The Components of the System Unit Chapter 4 By: Janice Colon

The System Unit  The system unit is a box-like case that stores the electronic components of the computer used to process information.  Electronics components and other storage devices are located inside the system unit.  Components inside the system unit include:  Processor  Memory  Module  Cards  Ports  Connectors

The Motherboard  The motherboard or the system board, is the main circuit board in the system unit.  Mother board includes different types of chips.  A chip is a small piece of semi conducting material, on which integrated circuits are etched. There are various chip packages such as; Dual inline package Pin grid array package Flip chip package Single edge contact cartridge

Central Processing Unit  The central processing unit, or the processor, interprets and carries out the basic instructions that operate a computer.

Central Processing Unit  The CPU contains the control unit and the arithmetic/logic unit.  The control unit directs and coordinates most of the operations in the computer.  For every instruction, the control unit repeats a set of four basic operations called machine cycle: Fetch - obtain program instruction or data item from memory Decode - translate instruction into commands Execute - carry out command Store - write result to memory The arithmetic/logic unit performs arithmetic, comparison, and logical operations.

Central Processing Unit  Pipelining With pipelining the CPU begins executing a second instruction before it completes the first instruction.  Registers The registers temporarily hold data and instructions. o Stores location from where instruction was fetched o Stores instruction while it is being decoded o Stores data while ALU processes it  The system Clock The system clock control the timing of all computer operations. The clock speed is the speed at which a processor executes instructions.

Central Processing Unit Comparison of Personal Computer Processors The most popular personal computer processor are: Pentium Xeon Athlon Celeron Itanium Duron Processor Installation and Upgrades Instead of buying a new computer it might be better to upgrade your processor to increase the computer’s performance. Processor upgrades are identified as: A chip for chip upgrade A piggyback upgrade A daughterboard upgrade

Data Representation Most computers are digital which means they only recognize only two discrete states: on and off. 1ON 0OFF

Data Representation Computers uses a binary system to recognize the two states. The binary system is a number that has just two unique digits, 0, 1, called bits. Bit is the smallest unit of data the computer can represent. When eight bits are grouped together as a unit, they form a byte, which provides enough different combinations of 0’s and 1’s to represent 256 individual characters. These characters include numbers, uppercase and lowercase letters of the alphabet, and punctuation marks. Combinations of 0’s and 1’s are defined by patterns called coding scheme. Two popular coding schemes are: The American Standard Code for Information Exchange The Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code

Memory  What is memory?  Temporary storage area for data, instructions, and information.  It consists on one or more chips on motherboard  How is memory measured?  By the number of bytes available Kilobyte (KB) Megabyte (MB) Gigabyte (GB)

Memory  There are two types of system unit memory.  Volatile memory, which loses its contents when the computers power is turned off.  Nonvolatile memory, which does not loses its content when the computers power is turned off.  Memory in a computer refers to RAM (random access memory)  Consists of memory chips that can be read and written to by the processor and other devices.  Also called main memory or primary storage.  Most RAM is volatile.  The more RAM a computer has the faster it responds.

Memory  How Application Programs Transfer In and Out of RAM?  Step 1. When the computer is running, certain operating system files are in RAM. The operating system displays on the screen.  Step 2. When you start a program, the program loads into RAM from the hard disk. As you are creating the document the information is on RAM and it shows in the screen.  Step 3. When you quit the program, RAM may be used to store another program or data. The original program is removed from the screen, and the operating system’s user interface re appears.  Step 4. When you quit a program, its program instructions are removed from RAM. The Web browser no longer is displayed on the screen.

Memory  What are two basic types of RAM chips?

Memory  ROM (read-only memory) refers to memory chips that only can be read and used, which means they cannot be modified.  ROM is nonvolatile memory (NVM), meaning that its contents are not lost when the computer’s power is turned off. A variation of the ROM chip, called programmable read-only memory (PROM), is a blank chip on which you can place items permanently.

Memory  Flash Memory  also known as flash ROM or flash RAM, is nonvolatile memory that can be erased electronically and reprogrammed.  CMOS  Another type of memory chip, it stores configuration information about the computer and uses battery power to retain information when the power to the computer is turned off.

Expansion Slots and expansion cards  An expansion slot is an opening, or socket, where you can insert a circuit board into the motherboard.  These circuit boards are called; card, expansion board, expansion board, adapter card, adapter, interface card, add- in, and add-on.  There are four types of expansion cards found in most of today’s computers; Video card Sound card Network interface card Modem card

Ports  A cable often attaches external devices to the system unit. A port is the point of attachment to the system unit.  Ports have different types of connectors which are used to connect a cable with a device.  Male connectors have one or more exposed pins.  Female connectors have matching holes to accept the pins.

Ports  Most computers have three types of ports; Serial port Parallel port Universal serial bus

Buses  How buses contribute to a computers processing speed?  Bits are transfer internally within the circuitry of the computer along electrical channels.  These channels are called a bus. They allow the various devices inside and attached to the system unit to communicate with each other. The bus width determines the number of bits that can be transferred at one time. In most computer word size is the number of bits the processor can interpret and execute at a given time.  A computer has two basic types of buses System bus – connects the CPU to main memory. Expansion bus – allows the CPU to communicate with peripheral devices.

Bay  A bay is an open area inside the system unit in which you can install additional equipment.  Drive bays  External drive bay – allows access from outside the system unit. Floppy A disk DVD Zip drives  Internal drive bay – concealed entirely within the system unit. Hard disk drive

Power Supply  Power supply is the component in the system unit that converts the wall outlet AC power into DC power.  AC adapter – an external power supply.

Mobile Computers  What is a mobile computer?  Looks like a notebook  Weights between 2.5 and 8 pounds  Mobile computers system unit contain;  Motherboard  Processor  Keyboard  Speakers  Display 